I judged baritone's too soon

Mojoe01

New member
When all these baritone guitars started coming out, I thought the idea was rediculous. Basically, I just thought of it as the guitar industry bowing down to a generation of guitar players who had to use incredibly low tunings to cover up the fact that they couldn't play.
Well, I was getting my car serviced yesterday, and the shop happens to be in the same plaza as Guitar Center, so I went over there to kill some time. I wasn't really looking for anything in particular, just checkin stuff out, but a clerk was following me everywhere asking if I wanted to try every item I looked at, so I gave in and picked up the Les Paul I was closest to and went over and found a 65' Twin Reverb Reissue to plug into. I was really diggin the looks of the les paul, black with brushed metal features. I currently have a platinum LP with black knobs, pickups, guard, etc, so I thought it was kinda neat...basically the inverse of what I already have.
And then I plugged in. Now, granted, this was a 65' reissue I was playing through, so I knew good tone wasn't going to be hard to find, but I was amazed at how well the guitar played and sounded. I flipped the tag up to see if they had any details about what exactly was in it, and thats when I saw that it was a baritone. I couldn't believe I was playing the guitar I was so against. I don't know if it was the fact that I was playing .13's, or perhaps the longer scale (and therefore, more string to give fuller tone) but I loved it. Then, after thinking about it a while, a baritone guitar tuned to standard is really no different than the difference in scale from a gibson to a fender. After playing this guitar, I think I'm gonna work on uping my string guage a bit (which I'll do on my tele first, since...thats my beater) and if all goes well, and has pleasing results, I'll see about doing the same for my LP.
I guess the moral here is that I judged these guitars before I ever really gave them a chance.
 
Re: I judged baritone's too soon

Mojoe01 said:
Then, after thinking about it a while, a baritone guitar tuned to standard is really no different than the difference in scale from a gibson to a fender.

Except that the difference between a Fender and Gibson is about 3/4" while the difference between a Fender/Gibson and the LP Baritone is about 2.5"/3.25"

Baritones are said to be nice sounding guitars. I've yet to find one to try.
 
Re: I judged baritone's too soon

you lucky bastard!
In all my local music stores it's usually a chore for the store people to let you try somethin out, I wish they would follow me around
 
Re: I judged baritone's too soon

Baritones- i've come across 2 that i like thusfar: The Ibanez MMM1 & the OLP... i especially like the former which sports the same humbuckers in the John Scofield jazz guitar, it sounded just right. mudless...
 
Re: I judged baritone's too soon

Mojoe01 said:
When all these baritone guitars started coming out, I thought the idea was rediculous. ....
DAYUM you´re old!!! Baritones have been around for about 250 years :D:D:D

I guess the moral here is that I judged these guitars before I ever really gave them a chance.

Good to see you learned ypur lesson. This is unfortunately a mistake that almost everybody makes, judging something that they have no idea about. It´s just that few ever realize where their head is. You can consider yourself blessed ;) :D:D
 
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